Rebecca Hazelton Fake Son Quote Meme with Edited Wikipedia Roast

This meme is a collage-style screenshot combining two Twitter (X) posts and an edited Wikipedia entry. At the top, American poet Rebecca Hazelton shares a profound, poetic quote she claims was spoken by her 3-year-old son: "Everyone dies one day. Everyone. Even wolves. But not books. Not words. Words don't die." She adds a note that her son is smarter than her. Immediately below, user Jack McGarry replies with an angry, dismissive comment: "Oh fuck off Rebecca he did not say that". The bottom section displays an edited Wikipedia page for Rebecca Hazelton, which includes a standard Wikipedia template warning about unsourced content for a living person, then appends a satirical, false line: "She also lies about what her three year old son said throughout online media." The humor stems from the absurdity of attributing such a sophisticated quote to a toddler, the blunt callout, and the edited Wikipedia entry that amplifies the mockery by framing the lie as a factual biographical detail.
@Jack McGarry Twitter/X

Oh fuck off Rebecca he did not say that

Dialogue

Rebecca Hazelton
"Everyone dies one day. Everyone. Even wolves. But not books. Not words. Words don't die." --my son, 3, who is a lot smarter than I am
Jack McGarry
Oh fuck off Rebecca he did not say that

Text content

Rebecca Hazelton Stafford (born 1978) is an American poet, editor, and critic. She also lies about what her three year old son said throughout online media.

Overview

This meme is a collage-style screenshot combining two Twitter (X) posts and an edited Wikipedia entry. At the top, American poet Rebecca Hazelton shares a profound, poetic quote she claims was spoken by her 3-year-old son: "Everyone dies one day. Everyone. Even wolves. But not books. Not words. Words don't die." She adds a note that her son is smarter than her. Immediately below, user Jack McGarry replies with an angry, dismissive comment: "Oh fuck off Rebecca he did not say that". The bottom section displays an edited Wikipedia page for Rebecca Hazelton, which includes a standard Wikipedia template warning about unsourced content for a living person, then appends a satirical, false line: "She also lies about what her three year old son said throughout online media." The humor stems from the absurdity of attributing such a sophisticated quote to a toddler, the blunt callout, and the edited Wikipedia entry that amplifies the mockery by framing the lie as a factual biographical detail.

Origin notes

The meme originates from an interaction on Twitter (now X), where Rebecca Hazelton's original tweet about her son's quote was met with public skepticism. An unknown user created this collage by screenshotting the Twitter thread and editing Rebecca Hazelton's Wikipedia page to add the satirical claim about lying about her son. This is a classic screenshot remix meme that repurposes social media content and edited public reference material to create a comedic, mocking narrative. It likely circulated on meme-focused platforms like Reddit, Twitter, and other social media sites as a joke about pretentious or false social media posts.

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